Bitcoin Mining Centralization Concerns Rise: Single Entity Controls Nearly Half of Network Hashrate
TL;DR
- Increasing Centralization in Bitcoin Mining: Recent studies have raised concerns about the growing centralization of Bitcoin mining, with one entity controlling nearly 47% of the network hashrate. This trend towards oligopoly is driven by changes in reward distribution by mining pools.
- Economic Implications of Centralization: The BitMEX Research team created a model to examine the potential economic effects of this concentration. The model suggests that only around $20 million of capital might be required for variance-smoothing operations.
- Risks of Centralized Authority: The dominance of nearly half of the network’s hashrate by a single entity not only challenges the decentralization principle fundamental to Bitcoin, but also poses significant risks related to network security, potential price tampering, and the reliability of transaction validation procedures.
Recent studies conducted by BitMEX Research and Bitcoin expert Alex Bergeron have sparked worries about the increasing centralization of Bitcoin mining. Currently, one entity has control over the Coinbase outputs for around 47% of the network hashrate. This concentration indicates a growing trend towards oligopoly in the Bitcoin mining system.
A single custodian now controls the coinbase addresses of at least 9 pools, representing 47% of total hashrate.
As demonstrated by this consolidation of mining reward outputs from AntPool, F2Pool, Binance Pool, Braiins, btccom, SECPOOL and Poolin:https://t.co/IQpH2TgP6k https://t.co/w5Nk09Rawf pic.twitter.com/6RDHdm0ZjP
— mononaut (tx/acc) (@mononautical) April 9, 2024
This trend may be driven by mining pools changing how they distribute rewards to miners to decrease fluctuations. By making this adjustment, these pools become more appealing and gain a stronger position in the market. Well-known mining pools such as AntPool, F2Pool, and Binance Pool have entrusted a single custodian with managing their Coinbase addresses.
The BitMEX Research team further examined the potential economic effects of this concentration. According to their report, “Only around $20 million of capital might be required to undertake such variance smoothing operations, a relatively small amount given the vast scale of the Bitcoin mining industry.”
To support their conclusions, BitMEX Research created a model that imitates the activities of a Bitcoin mining pool on a large scale, aiming to eliminate payout fluctuations.
Potential Risks Associated with Centralized Bitcoin Mining
The model, despite its simplicity, employs fundamental probability and financial concepts to predict the results of daily mining activities, evaluating the viability of a reserve fund under different degrees of network hashrate involvement.
“Our simulations show that with an initial reserve fund of 300 to 400 Bitcoins, a mining operation can remain economically viable over a year, even if adverse conditions prevail,” the study elaborates.
The findings indicate that a more substantial pool with a considerable portion of the hashrate would necessitate a more extensive fund to sustain operations. The total capital required remains within acceptable boundaries for key industry participants.
Even with these financial revelations, the consequences of such centralized authority are extensive, extending beyond just economic dynamics.
The dominance of nearly half of the network’s hashrate by a single entity not only contests the decentralization principle that is fundamental to Bitcoin’s philosophy, but also poses substantial risks associated with network security, potential price tampering, and the reliability of transaction validation procedures.